The Brain

ProMICAD is the first system to classify the potentialities of people based on bicameral theory (which relates to the two hemispheres of the brain) involving an effects-gradient of chromatic and achromatic schema. One of the reasons it is effective is because colour and light impulses pass from the eye straight through the retino-hypothalmic tract to the hypothalamus, which is the very seat of emotions at the centre base of the brain.

The reason anyone is able to see colour at all is because light impulses from the things that we see pass through the retina and the optic nerve to the chiasma and optic tract. From there the impulses pass into the lateral geniculate bodies that processes colour and sends it through an optic radiation to the occipital cortex either side of the calcerine fossa in the striate area of Gennari to form (upside down and reverse) images at the back of the head.

The brain surgeon, Roger Sperry, demonstrated that the two hemispheres of the brain assimilate and process right-and-left stimuli differently. Motifs in the left field of vision are processed in the right hemisphere and those on the right are processed in the left hemisphere. The left brain tends to think serially and in meticulous detail, whilst the right brain tends to be spontaneous and holistic in its thinking. Such then are some of the powerful factors at work in the matrices of ProMICAD.